The title basically asks the question. I'll review the relevant terminology and explain what I have and haven't found in the literature.
Let $G$ be a reductive group. Let $v \leq w$ be elements of the Weyl group, with $X_v$ and $X^w$ the corresponding Schubert and opposite Schubert. Let $R_v^w = X_v \cap X^w$. This is called a Richardson variety. A variety $R$ is said to have rational singularities if there is a resolution of singularities $Z \to R$ which has certain nice cohomological properties.
I know of two references in the literature for the fact that Richardson varieties have rational singularities: Theorem 4.2.1 in Michel Brion's "Lectures on the Geometry of Flag Varieties" and Lemma 2 in his "Positivity in the Grothendieck Group of Flag Varieties". Both of these essentially give the same proof, though in different language. In the notation of "Lectures", they construct a variety $Z_{\underline{v}}^{\underline{w}}$ with a map to $R_v^w$ and proof that it has the correct cohomological properties. This part of the proof works in any characteristic.
However, in order to show that $Z_{\underline{v}}^{\underline{w}}$ is smooth, they appeal to Kleiman transversality, or to generic smoothness. These arguments only work in characteristic zero.
Does anyone know a reference which addresses this? (I have e-mailed Brion, and also Kumar, and am waiting to hear back, but I figured someone here might know this.)
$f_{\ast} \mathcal{O}_X =\mathcal{O}_Y$
and$R^i f_{\ast} \mathcal{O}_X = R^i f_{\ast} \omega_X=0$
for $i>0$. $\endgroup$